Turks and rebels say Syria breaking truce, threatening peace talks

An image from video posted online by Syrian opposition activists on Jan. 3, 2016, shows alleged bombing by Iran-backed Hezbollah and other pro-Syrian regime forces in the town of Wadi Barada, near Damascus. Syria’s opposition forces and their Turkish backers say the Syrian regime has repeated violated a tenuous cease-fire.

The Syrian armed opposition said in a statement on Tuesday that it had decided to put all discussions about the Kazakhstan talks on hold, along with any other consultations regarding the tenuous cease-fire until, in their view, the truce is fully implemented.

The statement was signed by all the factions who agreed to adhere to the ceasefire agreement brokered by Turkey and Russia with the Syrian regime.

They said their decision to suspend the talks came after Syrian forces and their Iranian-backed allies escalated attacks on the besieged town of Wadi Barada, less than 15 miles northwest of Damascus, where rebels are holed up.

Syrian civil defense sources said Wednesday that six people were killed and 17 more injured in attacks by Iran-backed Hezbollah militants on Wadi Barada during the past three days.

The opposition also cited alleged Russian airstrikes targeting Idlib province and Aleppo’s southern countryside as they suspended involvement in the prelude to the peace talks.

The cease-fire is supposed to prepare the way for talks in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, in late January between the government and the opposition. Those talks are to be brokered by Russia, Iran, and Turkey.